Exhibition of items from the Museum of Romani Culture was opened on Wednesday evening before a numerous audience in Belgrade’s Atelje 212 theater. The author of the exhibition dubbed “Romani Material Culture” is Dragoljub Acković, the director of the Museum of Romani Culture and World Roma Assembly member.
Posts Tagged ‘exhibition’
Intellectsoft Announces Participation in Upcoming MediaPro 2010 Exhibition Posted By : Intellectsoft
Intellectsoft Ltd, one of the leaders in mobile application development, is going to take part in the mediaPro 2010 exhibition, a significant event in advertising industry which is to be held in London, the UK on 2nd & 3rd November 2010.
Exhibition Stand Design is a Must-Have for Successful Brand Marketing Posted By : Katrina Wagner
Exhibitions indeed make excellent places for face-to-face marketing, which involves a number of benefits. Owing to this, numerous companies take efforts in attending trade shows and exhibitions.
Marlon Brando, Anthony Quinn exhibition to go on world tour
An exhibition of rare and unseen photographs of late actors Marlon Brando and Anthony Quinn are to be displayed in Italy before touring the world. Officials of the estate of photographer Sam Shaw have teamed up with Brando Enterprises and the Anthony Quinn Foundation to present The Rebels: Marlon Brando and Anthony Quinn at the [...]
Edgecore Networks Debuts End-to-End ISP Network Solutions
At the CoomunicAsia exhibition in Singapore, Edgecore Networks demonstrated a series of end-to-end solutions designed for SOHO and cost-conscious businesses. – Edgecore Networks, a provider of wired and wireless networking products, showcased
its end-to-end solutions for ISPs, enterprises, SMBs and small office/home
office (SOHO) organizations at the CommunicAsia 2010
exhibition in Singapore.
During the exhibition, the Accton Technology subsidiary …
Fans Fork Over $1K For Sleepover With Michael Jackson’s Most Prized Possessions
Michael Jackson fans in Japan have been offered the chance to spend a night with the King of Pop’s possessions in an exhibition in Japan.Promoters of The Neverland Collection at The Tokyo Tower, the world’s only official Jackson exhibition, will mark the first anniversary of the superstar’s death by holding a sleepover in its shrine, [...]
10-year-old Brooke Shields’ nude pic removed from exhibition
The provocative nude photograph of 10-year-old Brooke Shields has been removed from the Tate exhibition, following a visit by the police.
The picture by New York artist Richard Prince showing Shields standing naked in a bathtub, with a heavily made-up face and oiled torso had attracted the fury of child campaigners amid concerns it could be [...]
George Harrison exhibition cancelled after rare photo theft
An exhibition for paying tribute to the late ‘Beatles’ star George Harrison in his hometown has been cancelled after a rare signed photograph of the star was stolen.
The ‘For George’ tribute opened in early August in his native Liverpool, England.
And on display were memorabilia and rare artefacts from the musician’’s career.
However, the organisers of the [...]
Pictures from an exhibition
Bill Clinton’s private diplomacy in North Korea
THE pictures may yet turn out to be the most significant aspect of Bill Clinton’s surprise trip to North Korea this week. Images of the American former president in Pyongyang, stern-faced and stiff on a stool beside the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, appeared on newspapers, television screens and news websites all over the world. The White House declared the trip a “private” one earlier in the week, although North Korea’s officials strained to suggest otherwise. Whatever its intended diplomatic weight, however, North Korea’s leader, who has craved bilateral talks with the United States over his nuclear programme, may claim a propaganda coup, after drawing an important American to pose at his side.
The immediate goal for Mr Clinton was to oversee the release of two young American journalists, Euna Lee and Laura Ling, who were arrested on the Chinese-North Korean border in March while reporting on a story about North Korean women forced by poverty into China. The two women had been sentenced to 12 years’ hard labour for allegedly entering North Korea illegally and committing “hostile acts”. Now pardoned, they left the country with Mr Clinton. …
ARA Asset sets up fund to acquire Suntec Singapore: Update 1
ARA Asset Management, part of Li Ka-Shing’s Cheung Kong group of companies, said it closed a fund that will buy the Suntec Singapore International Convention & Exhibition Centre for $235 million.
The ARA Harmony Fund is a joint venture with Suntec Real Estate Investment Trust and other private investors, ARA Asset said in a statement to the Singapore stock exchange yesterday. ARA Asset will be appointed the asset manager and convention and exhibition service provider for Suntec Singapore once the acquisition is completed, it added.
Aug. 3, 1803: Crystal Palace Architect Born
1803: Joseph Paxton is born in Milton Bryan, England. His career will take him from garden boy to gardener to landscape designer to architect-engineer of the largest glass buildings of his day — including London’s famous Crystal Palace of 1851.
Paxton built a huge glass greenhouse at Chatsworth between 1836 and 1840 for his employer, the [...]
Kaki King Art Project
Kaki King Presents The Exhibition
![]() Kaki King |
Guitarist extraordinaire Kaki King is proud to announce The Exhibition, an art project that involves 16 artists and random King fans taking an actual guitar and creating original visual pieces inspired by one of her songs. The project culminates on August 7 at Littlefield Gallery in Brooklyn, NY.
Sprung from the idea of using paint to visually represent the wide range of movement of King’s virtuosic guitar playing, The Exhibition has now grown to involve much more than just paint. Each artist/fan was given the blank canvas of a guitar to shape, break, build, and form around the theme of a King song of their choice. Hailing from all corners of the United States, each artist has taken his or her guitar in wildly different directions that range from ant farms, to delicate etchings and even an explosion. Many are also incorporating King’s hand movement into their design. One can follow their progress on the project’s Facebook page.
The gallery show will be a display of all the guitars and will include a unique performance by King herself. She will take her iconic blue guitar, seen most prominently in the video for the song “Playing With Pink Noise,” and will do a performance of the song with pink paint on her hands and fingertips. This is already an incredibly valuable guitar, and it will be auctioned off to benefit VH1′s Save the Music, a charity dedicated to keeping music in schools so new generations of musicians will continue to be born. In addition, all of the guitar works will be for sale at a price set by each artist.
The entire show will be documented by a photographer for posterity so people can get to experience the event online if they can’t make it to the gallery. King’s performance will take place approximately two hours after the opening of the show.
John Brown: A Forgotten Kitchen Debate and American Public Diplomacy
Though its tools of persuasion have changed, US public diplomacy is above all about human beings connecting rather than a government “pushing a message” on a “target audience.”
Bauhaus minimalism in Berlin
New Berlin retrospective for movement banned by Nazis and now reflected at Ikea
It started as a controversial experiment in the social effects of art and design, producing ideas that were often considered impractical, uncomfortable and costly. But 90 years after its conception by radical and combative designers the Bauhaus movement is nowadays credited with having had the biggest influence of any movement on modern, minimalist style.
The biggest retrospective of the German art school has opened in Berlin, showing the movement’s creations – from weighing scales to seats shaped from gaspipes, coffee pots and the spartan elegance of a doctor’s surgery – and exploring its enduring effect on society.
The exhibition Modell Bauhaus, at the Martin-Gropius-Bau, celebrates the school’s socialist ideology, according to which its designers sought to find a way to produce functional and affordable design, available to the masses. Modell Bauhaus, which will travel to New York’s MoMA in November, explores the movement’s adage “less is more”, as well as the connection between the Bauhaus and modern, mass-produced design.
Many proponents of the decidedly non-conformist movement, which was founded in 1919 by the architect Walter Gropius, argue that, like it or loathe it, the Bauhaus’ most powerful modern-day legacy is the Swedish flat-pack furniture store Ikea. “Mass-market design like Ikea’s would be inconceivable today without the Bauhaus,” said the newly-appointed director of the Bauhaus foundation, Philipp Oswalt, in an interview ahead of the anniversary celebrations. Events taking place across Germany include dance and theatre productions, architectural tours, readings and workshops.
The movement is still very much in existence but nowadays it largely concentrates on urban planning rather than household objects. Gone too are the movement’s utopian ideas about establishing a conflict-free world. “Today we have relinquished the naive hopes and realise that utopias are not enough,” Oswalt said. The Berlin exhibition charts the movement’s progress through its 14-year existence, from the Weimar school, which was founded in 1919 to the Dessau school and finally to the Berlin school, led by architect Mies van der Rohe, that was closed by the Nazis in 1933. While some say the Nazi ban led to the movement’s break-up, the very fact that many of its members fled to all corners of the world such as China, America and Israel allowed the Bauhaus influence to spread much more effectively than it might have done had its focus remained in Germany.
The exhibition makes much of the movement’s desire to experiment, in objects such as Lothar Schreyer’s design for a coffin for his wife, the striped dresses of Lis Volgers or Marcel Breuer’s Clubsessel B3, a somewhat uncomfortable steel-frame armchair.
But it was not a case of all work and no play. Photographs document the members’ penchant for partying. Partygoers were often invited to turn up to celebrations dressed up as the very household objects – such as cooking pots and plates – that the artists were attempting to redesign, and to enter the room via a large slide.
Sandcity at the Olympic Park
Find out more about Sandcity and their amazing compositions.
Tate Liverpool honours Picasso
Picasso’s cold war career as a highly political painter, peace campaigner and tireless fundraiser for leftwing causes will be revealed in an exhibition at Tate Liverpool next spring that will include letters from world leaders, including Nelson Mandela and Ho Chi Minh, as well as a telegram from Fidel Castro congratulating the artist on being awarded the Soviet Union’s international peace prize.
Christoph Grunenberg, the gallery’s director, said the exhibition would explode the myth that Picasso was “a playboy extrovert … more concerned with chasing women than world politics”.
Picasso himself said: “I have not painted the war because I am not the kind of painter who goes out like a photographer for something to depict. But I have no doubt war is in these paintings.”
The exhibition begins in 1944, the year he joined the French communist party. He remained a member until his death in 1973, and Lynda Morris, the curator, said the legend that he was the party’s largest individual donor is probably true.
He rarely gave money, but gave innumerable works to be reproduced as fund raising calendars, Christmas cards, silk scarves or limited edition prints, so many that the Communist journal l’Humanité had a full time staff member working with him on producing them.
She found dozens of boxes of political correspondence in the archives of the Picasso Museum in Paris, showing that he was in constant touch with peace groups, refugee aid schemes and women’s groups, in Europe, north and south America, and Israel. He also supported hospitals and homes in France sheltering refugees from the Spanish civil war.
The exhibition opens with a painting last seen in Britain half a century ago, the 1944 Charnel House, with echoes of his famous Guernica, inspired by the first horrific images from the liberated concentration camps, and newspaper accounts of a Spanish Republic family killed while sheltering in their kitchen.
It will include several versions of his dove drawings, originally modelled on the fan tailed pigeons given him as a present by the painter Henri Matisse.
His doves became symbols recognised across the world of the peace movement, after one was chosen as the emblem of the first international peace congress in Paris in 1949 – the same month he named his daughter Paloma, the Spanish for dove. He produced new versions of the design for posters for each of the later peace congresses including the Sheffield gathering, planned at the height of the Korean war, when Picasso himself was held by immigration for several hours, and which was abandoned after the Labour government of the day refused entry to hundreds of delegates including the American singer Paul Robeson, and the writers Pablo Neruda, and Louis Aragon.
The exhibition will not be seen in London, and builds on the success of the Liverpool gallery’s success with its major Gustav Klimt show, one of the hits of last year’s European Capital of Culture. Lynda Morris said it never occurred to her to approach a gallery in the south – the radical tradition of the north made it the right place for the show.
A once in a lifetime show
Delicate works by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo to include loans from the Uffizi in Florence
The British Museum’s collection of Italian Renaissance drawings is so fragile that its masterpieces are exhibited only once in a generation.
Next summer a chance to see these delicate objects will finally come around, as the museum launches an exhibition, in partnership with the Uffizi in Florence, of works on paper by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo.
The 100 or so works will span the period 1400-1510 and artists including Jacopo and Gentile Bellini, Botticelli, Filippo Lippi, Mantegna, Michelangelo and Raphael.
About half of the works will come from Florence, and some have never been shown in the UK before. Bringing the drawings from Florence together with those from London, said British Museum director Neil MacGregor, will “together allow a different reading of draughtsmanship from the period. It will allow a new engagement with this part of the Italian Renaissance.”
In typical British Museum style, the message is “only connect”; for the museum will at the same time mount an exhibition of West African sculpture of the same period. Works from the kingdom of Ife – a powerful, cosmopolitan city state in what is now Nigeria that flourished from the 12th to the 15th centuries – will form the focus of an exhibition for the first time outside Africa.
“They are works of absolutely comparable quality [to the Renaissance drawings],” said MacGregor of the strikingly finely worked, naturalistic sculptures.
The exhibitions together form a counterpoint to the blockbuster Moctezuma exhibition, opening this autumn, which will also focus on the early 16th century – this time on the last Aztec emperor before Spanish conquest. MacGregor said Mexican colleagues had been “astonishingly generous” in loans to the exhibition, which include the ceremonial throne-cum-altar of Moctezuma.
Alongside elaborate Aztec skulls, the exhibition will also show a selection of contemporary Mexican skulls created for the Day of the Dead, the festival energetically celebrated in Mexico on 1 November. The British Museum will also celebrate the feast, and, according to MacGregor, “large quantities of sugar skulls, the delicacy of the Day of the Dead, are already on order”.
MacGregor, launching the museum’s annual review, reported on the British Museum’s next big step: its “north-west development”, a 11,000 sq metre exhibition space and conservation centre.
Two-thirds of the funds for the £135m extension are secured, and, according to British Museum chair Niall FitzGerald, the museum is “shovel-ready” to start work on building, pending trustees’ go-ahead and planning permission from Camden council, a decision on which is expected later this month. English Heritage, said a museum spokeswoman, are fully backing the plans for the extension.
The new space, designed by Graham Stirk of Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners, Sir Richard Rogers’s practice, is planned as a replacement for the reading room in the museum’s Great Court as the venue for large-scale exhibitions such as those recently devoted to Hadrian and Shah Abbas. Permission to use the reading room as a venue for exhibition expires in 2012 and, warned FitzGerald: “If we don’t have another space for our exhibitions that would be a catastrophe.”
The government has pledged £22.5m for the development; about £30m will come from the museum’s reserves and the balance, MacGregor was “hopeful and confident”, is being found from private donors.MacGregor said that a key challenge for the museum was getting its collection out on the road. In the last financial year, 2,500 objects from the museum were seen in other UK locations.
Transporting objects, he said, was “technically safe – the limits are now ones of resources and making sure there are places that can receive them”.
Developing the museum’s online facilities was also crucial. “By the end of this year there will be 2m objects online – well ahead of any major institution in the world,” said MacGregor. “Making available free digital downloads of the highest possible quality is the natural corollary of free entry to the museum.”
It was a year of growth for the institution, with visitor figures for 2008 at 5.93m, making it the most popular visitor attraction in the UK.
A number of important gifts had been made to the museum, and new galleries created for the matchless Percival David collection of Chinese art, which has been lent to the museum in perpetuity. It is, said MacGregor, the most important addition to the museum collection since the Sutton Hoo treasure in 1942.
The world around 1500: connecting the British Museum’s exhibitions
In 1492, Christopher Columbus sails to the Americas.
In 1498, Vasco da Gama reaches India after rounding the Cape of Good Hope.
In 1492, the last Muslim ruler of Granada, Boabdilm, surrenders to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. In 1499, forced baptisms begin.
In 1502, Moctezuma becomes ruler of the Aztec empire (Aztec mask below); under him it reaches its largest size. In 1519, he and Cortés meet.
By the end of the 15th century, the kingdom of Ife in modern Nigeria begins to give way to Benin as a wealthy west African political and artistic centre.
In the early 16th century Benin sends an ambassador to Portugal; Portuguese missionaries are sent to Benin.
Somewhere between 1503 and 1507, Leonardo paints the Mona Lisa.
In about 1507, Raphael paints St Catherine of Alexandria, now in the National Gallery.
In 1513, Machiavelli writes The Prince.
In 1516, Rafael Perestrello, a cousin of Christopher Columbus, becomes the first European explorer to land on the southern coast of mainland China. The following year, the Portuguese send an expedition to try to set up trade relations with China in Guangzhou.
In the early 16th century, the Mughal empire begins its rise.
In 1503, Henry VII obtains a papal dispensation allowing his son Henry to marry his widowed daughter-in-law, Catherine of Aragon.
Agri-firms Make Comeback At International Trade Exhibition
- ESTHER FUNG
After an absence of three years, agribusinesses will make a comeback, with
at least two participating in the Enterprise Exchange exhibition this
week.
“With prices of goods and commodities getting higher because of high oil
prices, land-owners and agricultural entrepreneurs would be interested in
finding out how to increase their yields,” said Dr Sung Do Song, director
of agricultural consultancy and fertiliser-maker Agro-Genesis.
Organised by Global Entrepolis @ Singapore (GES), this annual
international trade fair, the fifth since 2003, aims to attract up to
20,000 people to the Suntec City Convention and Exhibition Centre from
today to Thursday.
Besides the agri-businesses, there are about 350 companies from over 30
countries that will exhibit their offerings in the manufacturing, exchange
dealings and energy sector, said managing director Derrick Tan of Zenith
Events Management, organisers of GES 2007.




